DocumentCode
1314062
Title
Murine Cardiac Catheterizations and Hemodynamics: On the issue of Parallel Conductance
Author
Constantinides, Christakis ; Angeli, Stelios I. ; Mean, Richard James
Author_Institution
Lab. of Physiol. & Biomed. Imaging, Univ. of Cyprus, Nicosia, Cyprus
Volume
58
Issue
11
fYear
2011
Firstpage
3260
Lastpage
3268
Abstract
Catheter-based measurements are extensively used nowadays in animal models to quantify global left ventricular (LV) cardiac function and hemodynamics. Conductance catheter measurements yield estimates of LV volumes. Such estimates, however, are confounded by the catheter´s nonhomogeneous emission field and the contribution to the total conductance of surrounding tissue or blood conductance values (other than LV blood), a term often known as parallel conductance. In practice, in most studies, volume estimates are based on the assumptions that the catheter´s electric field is homogeneous and that parallel conductance is constant, despite prior results showing that these assumptions are incorrect. This study challenges the assumption for spatial homogeneity of electric field excitation of miniature catheters and investigated the electric field distribution of miniature catheters in the murine heart, based on cardiac model-driven (geometric, lump component) simulations and noninvasive imaging, at both systolic and diastolic cardiac phases. Results confirm the nonuniform catheter emission field, confined spatially within the LV cavity and myocardium, falling to 10% of its peak value at the ring electrode surface, within 1.1-2.0 mm, given a relative tissue permittivity of 33 615. Additionally, <;1% of power leaks were observed into surrounding cavities or organs at end-diastole. Temporally varying parallel conductance effects are also confirmed, becoming more prominent at end-systole.
Keywords
bioelectric potentials; blood; blood flow measurement; cardiovascular system; catheters; muscle; animal model; blood conductance; cardiac model driven simulation; catheter based measurement; conductance catheter measurement; electric field excitation; end diastole; hemodynamics; left ventricular cardiac function; miniature catheter; murine cardiac catheterization; myocardium; nonhomogeneous emission field; noninvasive imaging; parallel conductance; tissue conductance; Blood; Catheters; Cavity resonators; Electric fields; Electrodes; Mice; Myocardium; Cardiac catheterizations; MRI; hemodynamics; mouse; parallel conductance; Animals; Electric Conductivity; Heart Catheterization; Hemodynamics; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Male; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Models, Cardiovascular; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Ventricular Function, Left;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBME.2011.2167147
Filename
6009175
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